4.5 Article

The use of ground glass in red glazes: structural 3D imaging and mechanical behaviour using optical coherence tomography and nanoindentation

Journal

HERITAGE SCIENCE
Volume 9, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1186/s40494-021-00527-y

Keywords

Glass in paint; Historical recipes; Optical coherence tomography (OCT); Nanoindentation; Quantitative data- analysis; Technical art history

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO), under the Netherlands Institute for Art, Conservation and Science (NICAS)
  2. NSF PIRE: Computationally-Based Imaging of Structure in Materials (CuBISM) [1743748]
  3. Koninklijke De Heus/Rijksmuseum Fonds
  4. Office Of The Director
  5. Office Of Internatl Science &Engineering [1743748] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study investigated the impact of adding colorless glass particles to red glazes, finding that the addition of glass particles increases the elastic and viscous moduli of the red glaze layers. Grinding glass together with oil and pigment resulted in a homogenous distribution and higher moduli.
In this study we investigate the impact of the addition of colourless glass particles to red glazes, as seen in many 15th-17th-century easel paintings. With the use of reconstructions, we examined the influence of the paint preparation process on the morphological and mechanical properties of the paint film. Three sets of reconstructions were made, a control without ground glass, reconstructions with coarse or fine ground glass mixed in, and reconstructions where fine ground glass was ground jointly with the pigment oil mixture. The latter gave the desired consistency and colour based on visual inspection. The dried reconstructions were non-invasively imaged using optical coherence tomography (OCT). A data-analysis pipeline was developed for both the segmentation of the OCT images and the measurement of the size and spatial distributions of the glass particles within the glaze layer. Moreover, we used a nanoindentation protocol to measure the viscoelastic properties of the dried red glaze film. The OCT results show an expected decrease in median particle size with longer grinding-time, for which the additional grinding with pigment/oil resulted in a more narrow size distribution and a homogenous spatial distribution of the glass particles. The nanoindentation results indicate that the addition of glass particles increases the elastic and viscous moduli of the red glaze layers. The homogeneous size distribution, obtained by grinding the oil, pigment, and glass together, induces higher elastic and viscous moduli. Our imaging and analyses approach, combining OCT and nanoindentation, provides a non-invasive and quantitative investigation of glass particles in (semi-) transparent paint layers, and their effect on the mechanical properties of the glaze. The results of this study contribute to a better understanding of the artists' addition of ground glass in paint layers.

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